i actually have a friend who makes these kinda low-qual - wash once t-shirts! I asked for a : 'ralph is the supreme over-lord' t-shirt to go to the last Truck with. He made me: 'Hi im RALPH and am a complete douche' !! I still wore and still do to this day (well i paid £3 for it)

Tee's a great idea. I think DiS should sell them at cost. Basically you'll have all the cool kids (and one or two cool not-quite kids) as a walking bill board for DiS. And wishpig's Wut? is obviously brilliant. :-)

Or was 'liek' wishpig? No matter.

(Although is does remind me of prison. A guard would *accidentally* shoot somebody or something and everyone would say, "Whuuut?" and start laughing. I guess you had to be there, but it was funny....)

I dunno, hasn't glasto become quite conservative music wise over the last few years? I remember a discussion about this earlier regarding Kylie and her subsequent pull out with people blaming Emily Eavis's influence. And of course to drag out the old cliche, you don't go to Glasto for the music man, you go for the 'atmos'.

I started that original one whinging about kylie. And i stand by my view that as you state the festival has become more conservative musically, which is not a good thing. If i remember rightly brainlove was pretty much in agreement, which is what that comments basically refering to.

Ie its not good that the festival is becoming more musically conservative, and james clunt playing reflects this. Hence, why its fucked up.

We've had this arguement on here before (back in april i think). It got a bit out of hand, and to be honest, yes you are right theres a lot on at glastonbury. But equally you could argue that the more commercial acts are bad because they do represent a pushing out of the more varied stuff. And furthermore, when you think about the fact that the tv coverage of the festival is vital in promoting bands that may not get much airplay on radio, if the main stages become increasingly commercialised then surely the development of music in the uk is hindered by this commercialisation (given that the main stages are the ones that recieve the bulk of the bbc's coverage).

you know, you're right. i may go as far as getting "liek woah" registered as a trademark.
wishpig, you are not useless, you invented "chyah", which i'm sure i have seen several people surreptitiously using.